You sent the application. You know you can do the job. You have 7 years of solid experience. And then… rejection. Or worse, silence.
It is easy to feel like the system is rigged against international candidates. And sometimes, unfortunately, unconscious bias is at play. But more often, the reason is much simpler, less malicious, and—crucially—much more fixable.
Recruiters are Risk Managers.
According to a famous eye-tracking study by The Ladders, recruiters spend an average of just 7.4 seconds reviewing a resume before making a decision to keep it or toss it.
In those 7 seconds, they aren’t reading deep into your soul. They are scanning for safety. An international CV is often full of “Unknowns”—unknown companies, unknown universities, and unknown job scopes. To a recruiter’s brain, Unknown leads to Risk.
Your job isn’t just to show your skills; it is to de-risk your profile.
Here are the 3 real reasons your CV is getting rejected, and the specific frameworks you need to fix them.
1. They Don’t Know Your Ex-Employer
This is the number 1 silent killer of international applications.
You might have worked for the biggest fintech company in Lagos, a retail giant in Nairobi, or a logistics leader in Mumbai. But if the hiring manager in London, Toronto, or New York hasn’t heard of it, they subconsciously downgrade the experience.
They assume: “If I don’t know the name, it must be a small, irrelevant ‘Mom and Pop’ operation.”
This is what career strategists call Brand Blindness. You are relying on a brand name that has no currency in the new market.
The Fix: The “Context Parenthesis”
Don’t let them guess. Tell them the scale. Use brackets immediately after the company name to provide the “Context.” You need to borrow authority from data when you lack brand recognition.
The Risky Version:
Marketing Manager PayStack, Lagos Jan 2019 – Present
(The recruiter thinks: “Is this a startup? Did they manage a budget of $500 or $5 million? I don’t know, so I’ll pass.”)
The De-Risked Version:
Marketing Manager PayStack (Tech Unicorn | Acquired by Stripe for $200M | 500+ Employees) Lagos, Nigeria
(The recruiter thinks: “Oh, this is a massive, high-growth corporate environment. If she can navigate that complexity, she can navigate ours.”)
Why this works: As noted by Harvard Business Review, employers are increasingly looking for transferable skills over pedigree. By defining the scale of your previous employer, you prove that your skills transfer to their size of organization.
2. The “Evidence Gap” (Claims vs. Proof)
Many international CV formats focus heavily on “Duties” or “Personal Qualities.” You might list bullet points like:
- “Hardworking and reliable team player.”
- “Responsible for managing sales.”
- “Good communicator.”
In the UK and North American markets, these are viewed as “Empty Claims.” As the experts at CV & Interview Advisors point out, there is a massive difference between evidence and claims. A claim is subjective; evidence is objective.
If you only list duties, you force the recruiter to trust you. If you list metrics, you force them to believe you.
The Fix: Metric Conversion
Math is the only universal language. It doesn’t need translation. Stop describing what you did. Describe the volume and impact of what you did.
The Risky Version (Claim):
- “Responsible for leading the sales team and hitting targets.”
The De-Risked Version (Evidence):
- “Led a team of 15 sales reps across 3 time zones to generate $2.4M in annual revenue (exceeding target by 20%).”
Why this works: Data from LinkedIn suggests that profiles with quantifiable achievements get viewed significantly more often. Numbers anchor your experience in reality.
3. The ATS
Before a human even sees your CV, it likely has to pass an Applicant Tracking System (ATS).
If you are using a creative template with columns, graphics, photos, or icons (which are common in many European and African CV formats), the ATS might not be able to read it. It parses your resume into “gibberish,” and you get auto-rejected before a human ever sees your name.
According to data from Jobscan, 98% of Fortune 500 companies use ATS software. If you aren’t optimizing for the robot, you aren’t in the game.
The Fix: Boring is Better
To pass the ATS, you need to simplify:
- Remove Photos: Unless strictly required in that specific country (like Germany), remove headshots. They confuse the parser.
- Single Column: Avoid double-column layouts; the ATS often reads them straight across, mixing up your work history.
- Standard Headings: Use “Work Experience” instead of “Professional Journey.”
Bonus: Reframe “Migration” as a Skill
Finally, many international candidates try to hide their background. They worry that their move is a “gap” or a distraction.
Shift your mindset. Your move is a Soft Skill.
Research from McKinsey & Company consistently shows that diverse and inclusive teams outperform their peers. Why? Because of Cognitive Diversity.
You have navigated a new culture, a new regulatory environment, and a complex relocation. That isn’t just “travel.” That is High-Level Adaptability and Resilience. Don’t be afraid to mention in your cover letter or interview that your international transition has sharpened your ability to learn fast.
Make Them Feel Safe
Recruiters want to hire you. They just need to feel safe doing it.
When you add Context, provide Evidence, and clear the ATS, you stop being a “Risk” and start being a “Candidate.”
Is your resume doing the work, or is it creating confusion?
If you are sending out applications and getting silence, stop. Upload your current CV to the Anutio Career Map. We don’t just check for spelling; we check for Risk, giving you a “Local Relevance Score” to help you spot the gaps before the recruiter does.



